Research paper topics, free example research papers

Backpacking - 1,536 words
Backpacking Have you ever been fed up with the
stress and noise of city life? Do you like
spending time outdoors? You are not alone. Every
year thousands of people head to the nearby
Appalachian trail to get away and spend some
quality time outdoors. Backpacking is, at least,
an interesting way to spend time outdoors. By
keeping all their gear in a backpack, campers can
travel distances with ease. The following will
identify and explain the techniques and equipment
used for backpacking on the Appalachian Trail. The
Appalachian Trail, or A.T. as it is known to
backpackers, is a foot trail that runs from
Springer Mt., Georgia to Mount Katahdin in Maine.
(Curran, 7) Running through the Appalach ...
Related: backpacking, spend time, appalachian mountains, soup, hips

Car Jacking - 1,031 words
Car Jacking Car Jacking Car Jacking is a nation
wide problem. There are many horrifying tales that
people have encountered. In April of 1999 a woman
and her baby were car jacked in their hometown in
Georgia. The mother stepped out of the car and was
giving her baby a bottle when out of nowhere a man
pushed her into the back seat of her car and he
jumped into the front and took off. She was
screaming and yelling and trying to fight the man.
Then she realized she had a cell phone in her
babies diaper bag. She managed to get to the phone
and then she dialed 911 and left the line open.
She was scared and nervous and didnt know where
she was going or what was going to happen to her
and her baby. ...
Related: popular mechanics, cell phone, different situations, possessions, calm

Look Back In Anger By Osborne - 1,958 words
Look Back In Anger By Osborne The play, A Look
Back in Anger, by John Osborne brings the notion
of the "angry man gone mad" to the surface. But
what does this play teach us? Or, does this play
teach us anything? At the end of this paper it
will be evident that this play does teach us
something, and that is how some people, as
individuals, have their own ways of thinking, and
reacting, which are considerably different from
the social norms. Of course the character we will
be analyzing is Jimmy. There are 3 stimuli that
correspond to radical reactions by Jimmy. The
first stimulus is love; Jimmy has ways of
expressing his love to the women of his life that
are different than the rest of society ...
Related: osborne, communication problem, role playing, public school, trigger

Play Report On A Look Back In Anger - 1,960 words
Play Report On A Look Back In Anger The play, A
Look Back in Anger, by John Osborne brings the
notion of the angry man gone mad to the surface.
But what does this play teach us? Or, does this
play teach us anything? At the end of this paper
it will be evident that this play does teach us
something, and that is how some people, as
individuals, have their own ways of thinking, and
reacting, which are considerably different from
the social norms. Of course the character we will
be analyzing is Jimmy. There are 3 stimuli that
correspond to radical reactions by Jimmy. The
first stimulus is love; Jimmy has ways of
expressing his love to the women of his life that
are different than the rest of soc ...
Related: mother in law, public school, world wars, instability, crusade

Pre Electrical Staged Lighting And Lighting Effects - 1,482 words
Pre Electrical Staged Lighting And Lighting
Effects PRE-ELECTRICAL STAGE LIGHTING AND LIGHTING
EFFECTS There is a common notion that stage
lighting is the youngest of the stage arts, having
suddenly been developed since the advent of
electricity. Electricity was the final link in a
chain of development stretching far into the past.
True, stage lighting has come a long way since the
dawn of electricity but its foundations were
thoroughly established during the three centuries
before Edison. Colored light, spotlights,
translucencies, and dimming were well known before
the incandescent lamp. This paper seeks to
identify and explain some of the most prevalent
forms and techniques of stage lighti ...
Related: electrical, lighting, important role, nineteenth century, allen

William Shakespeares The Merchant Of Venice Shylock - 1,678 words
William ShakespeareS The Merchant Of Venice -
Shylock Throughout the course of history, Jews
have been relentlessly persecuted. The English are
not an exception, since their history shows that
the general English attitude towards Jews during
the Elizabethan Era is anti-Semitic. This negative
bias towards Jews is apparently clear in
Elizabethan literature, including William
Shakespeares The Merchant of Venice. Shylock, the
Jewish antagonist in Shakespeares play, is
stereotypically portrayed as a villain in
accordance to popular prejudice. Thus, Shylock is
labeled as a villain because he is a Jew. This
misconception of Jews as being villainous in
nature persisted well into the 20th century unt ...
Related: merchant, merchant of venice, shylock, the merchant of venice, venice